New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1921, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

¥ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1921, NUTMEGS FOOTBALL TEAM BURY ARMY AND NAVY TEAM OF SOUTH MANCHESTER, 56 TO 0.—REIMER AND MIDGEON WIN BOUTS IN MERIDEN RING—HIGH SCHOOL ROOTERS ELATED OVER SATURDAY’S VICTORY — BRIDGEPORT TEAM DEFEATS WILLIAMS A. C. IN HECTIC BATTLE—HARDWARE CITY FIVE PREPARING FOR OPENING GAME OF SEASON. LOCAL BOXERS N Moot tiss 160 |NDIYIDUAL IEN Viuuis usis 1 G SCHOOL HAS 1 ale Captain Has 1 New Haven and Bridgeport Football Capt, Jim Robertson, of Dart New Haven, Nav, 7.—In one ufllyv-i ) vis deposged from ks position hardest fought football battles ever | J Reimer and Midgeon Returned i setoniny for e et | PrinCton Brilliancy Offsets| ‘ time this season, when Mack Aldrich, Mo Cpiontitt slonal ;.‘.m:,_ the Williams \J (eh ¥ n YR an i ya'e 1 i went down to defeat yesterday after- | Witors Over New Havem Bosers ieeier ot e i gt | Haryand's Scientio Spstem | ot oo ifenvmmerin ater: | gy vov e o Gl T SR e "» - ”\\ \“A‘Ii]‘l]‘ s in port team to 7. The Park City | \ Dartmout not scheduled to s i team scored in the first quarter | — Bohby Relmer and dack MIGRSON |in fiorien omalied, nb 167 pol New York, Nov. 7.—There were | when Forst made a touchdown, the | . local bo e through e Aot bbb s i Jl many things behind the fine vietory | try for a goal failing, With a few | Although outweighed by at least 20 ing colors in the ring at S I : i ‘u\‘u and four | \hjoh Princeton sred over Har- | minute Jeft to play in the fourth |POUNds to a man, the local high .'\('h‘n‘nli Saturday 1 gave ‘S e e ol of .,‘_, POINts. | vard on Saturday, but no fact stands | period, and with the locals leading, | %M Whitewashed the Columbia Pre dier” Gibso ing in the| Aldrich, Robertson and Killinger, | out more than this—it was the tri- | 7 to 6, Brady standing on his 41. |PATatory school eleven In New York | 10-round Midgeon | 0 State are all thed n the num- | ymph of (ndividual brilllancy over an | yard line kicked a goal from the |¢Ity Saturday, registering threo touch- “kayoec New Ha- |ber Hohdowng with Entne Sekel. fissaot) footiu m. It is nothing | fie downs for a 21 to 0 win. | ven In the . star bout | Hanson of Corne far in the lead |new for Harvard to play scientific| The Willlams team made a groat | It Was the frst timo in the history of was between A ubert of New Bed- |Ih the number of goals from touch- | foothall. The Crimson has been do- | bhid: for victory in the fourth per- |M&h #chool football that the team has ford, Mass, ar Charlie Pilkington |40 having registered thirty-one | fng this thing since Perey “aughton | jod,when an aerlal Attaclc Wik Cariad }nnnn into New York state. The .wunri.} of Meriden. It wa ned to be a |acc ite boots from the 15-yard Une. | first led the Cambridge eleven out of | op, finally resulting In a touch- |SAr! 17\;: with it si : |lv»(\lu(w:, \v!’t: draw by It Jim Galvin, a Wat Seven of th: major colleges were|the gridiron wilderness, But for t down by McCullom. It was estimat. | Friday afternoon for the metropolis | erbury offic here being many who | still unbeaten after Saturday’s con- |first time since 1911 the Crimson dis- | e that 8,500 fans witnessed the | ¥Ith Coach George C. Cassidy who ar- disagreed w i tests, Lafayette, Washington and Jef- | covered that even a perfect system | game, and there was not the slight- | "2nsed the game. A Kayo Tor Midgeon. ferson an e lead the bunch with | cannot alwiys \inst supermer t slgn of disorder, “"Moose” Miller, | 10 Now Yorkers' line waa too “”“i There w ig crowd in the Audi- |7 w»rww-v to l"\-u credit without | such as Coach per nad at his | a New Haven man, went into the "_l'flll to Mln'wM any ;.x-i‘wl ul‘l.m\\‘m{”l\ | torlum when the first bout started.|a single defeat. Cornell, Georgetown |command thi Bridgeport lineup in the latter part |!IRC Plunging, and while Battler Murtha Midgeon surprised his New Britian jand Penn State have won six contests | Ior two successive years np to last | of the game, and he was given a |5 usEed through several times for gains it was felt the wiser policy to use aerial Harvard had tied the Tig work and end runs. ¢ until well into the final friends by the manner in which he | without suffering a sethack and Penn | Saturc “razzing” by the EIm City rooters. handled himsclf. He outclassed Mit- | State has also played a tie game with |after traili ? ! % chell at every angle of the sport, Harvard, The Navy eleven s the Tth|perfod. In 1819, with Princeton in The first score came when Dixie Grif- | finished the affair by rocking his ad- | unhe fin made a pretty end run and crossel ad- ten eleven, but has played only |the va 4 the minutes flying fast, | 3 s : i versary to sleep. games. ’lvh]zlx(‘ y caught a forward pa the Columbia goal hml Capt Iwm:‘-‘ Easy For Bobby. | The Navy, however, is the only|and slipped across the goal line with | |man registered his first touchdown T when he raced across after nabbing « bby Reimer showed himself to eleven which has not heen score the tying touchdown. Again last sea- A% Rbby e g Enasderadion A 1 by Grifin. On a be a much improved boxer, by the this season. The Middies have pre-|son the Tige were leading, 11 to| forward pass tos N manner in which he avoided a num- |served their clean slate in winning|7, With only a few minutes to play, | VES A FARCE criss-cross play, Murtha dodged the ber of well intended clouts by Gib-|five games, They were hardest pressed | but it s now an old story how Cozch Gothamites and shot across the (‘ol-| son. 1In the opening rounds, it i00k- |Saturday by the little Bucknell eleven | Fisher sent Buell and Macomber into e umbia line, making the third and last ed as though Gibson would be sent|which held the Annapolis team to a [the fray, turned on a forward j to the mat, but he managed to|gingle touchdown. | game that hitherto had been kept un- weather the storm, and was given a| Cornell's Big Red team has proved | der cover, and used the scientific Har- touchdown. | Meucke, ends; Williams and Capt. JitTHE TOP ON HIGH—Mist big hand for his gameness when he | far and away the best scoring ma- | vard system as the lever with which E M q —_— — = b o 3 ™ ¢ [ ak sk anc left the ring. | chine, being credited with 337 points|to overturn the Tigers' hopes of vie- flsy anner Mm{({d_ igpn{{,“kfly.“'.(\’,. and | LOCAL QUINIVET QEATEN Catherine Cullongh, star higt ‘s G Back. | P! ory. SR SUALCH, haceniot He RS ks by SEiot | Py Tl mgon S e - 2 vory e 3 nd Davis, halfbacks; Griffin, = Jumper of Wellesley College, as sht two years since Eddie goes over the top, Pilkington's return to the ring was Tt 1n now | 2 i mot covered with any great amount {HARVARD PLAYERS | Casey departed from the Cambridge | It is not frequent that about 1,000 o oo 1 cedt se. | Portland High School Five Spring a of pugilistic display. While he ap- |campus. He was then the latest in| football fans turn out to sce the Nut- Cn‘rr‘l)' L ‘Jmm““ A Surprise on State school | | T peared to be in excellent condition, | IN FAIR CONDITION |[a brilliant string of Harvard stars| mess practice, but in substance this | CUrely on ice, fanding Went n o8 Bl | qeam, Winni X 0P’y P £ ‘he found himself up against an op- | - dating far back in the years and|is what occurred yesterday afternoon | CI'S ] B e e N s Trade 5 )i’y PlLs ponent who was willing at all times| e e | coming down to the days of Brickley | at Vibberts Field. An aggregation |O'Dell. Doc B Y e mama o the | school basketball team was defeated to mix it with him. Pilkington has| [and Mahan, who had been the ini- | billed as a football team for no rea- :h“ }f:"l”' o ("‘]hi" !‘vf(‘\:“l”l‘»"m o the | by the Fortiana High school team 16 5 2 Jlavel 3 ; oy " o ” | - o . r i e ke McCabe a erpak replaces b3 been noted in the past for his short|Players Are By No Mcans Discourag- | mediate predecessors of the nimble | son that we can explain, called the l‘:'.“km\‘:k‘: o Setasiter I the muard | to 14 Saturday afternoon at the Y. M quarterback; Murtha, fullback. flashes, and Saturday night, he tried | aged Over Defeat of aseys But since 1919 no figure has| Army and Navy club of South Man- | C. A. in Middletown. The Portland on-a few occasions to do this same | Saturday stepped forward to carry on the bur- | chester, furnished plenty of amuse- | POsitions. team gave the local boys a little sur- thing. Howveer, the flashes were| Cambridge, Mass, Nov. 7.—Har-|den of leadership and, with the pos-| ment for the crowd, when in a bur- T prise by playing the same style of greatly reduced in time length, and |vard's beaten football players are|sible exception of the youthful | esque affair, the Silk Town team was | HR TEAMS TIED | game that th k and orange” toward the end of the bout, it was | home, tired but by no means di; - | Gehrke, there is no Casey or Mahan | beaten, 56 to 0. It was the weirdest | T EE i | have played for the past year, notfceable that he refrained from faged over the task that _onfronts|on the Crimson squad tod | exhibition of foothall ever staged on R 3 The game w irst of the sea- | mixing it with Shubert any morc than (them of getting into # ape for the Indivignal Stars Dc 1t cal field. Although the affair [gpio state, Towa and Wiscodsin on | son for the e school and was was necesasry. To the writer it 100k- | Yale team In the staZim on Nov. 14,[ On Saturday, then, they had no| one-sided, it afforded the Nut- rather ragzed. The defence was par ed as though Shubert had all the bet- | Pitts was pret*s wmuch used up, but|Lourie or Keck or around | some chances to try out new Even Terms for Football Title in | ticularly poor and will need a lot of ter of the battle. Pilkington prob-|he alw .ecovers quickly and two|whom to build an attack. But, al-| plays which worked well. The one hard work to get it up to the stand- ably showed his best in the second,|weeks - ill have a lot of difference.|though Princeton excelled in individ- | bright feature of the game was con- Western Conference. ard set by t year's team. In gen- ness in taking advant opportunity and the poor support by the se was sponsible for the defe: f the loca I'or Portland, Cynoske a1 Olson starred. IFor New Dritain, Swanson ved well. | eral the slo geventh, elghth and ninth rounds.|O.en showed in the third quarter |ualétars, Harvard was the superior | tributed by Dill, the spectacular half- | 00 (0o curaa 1 e of eve His slaps had little effect oni Shubert (at Princeton that his injury was not|in the exact science of its foot! back of the Nutmegs, with a 65-yard [ y : Pilkington clected toward the end of | sorious, but he was all in at the finish | 1ts attack was a thing of beauty in|run. It was easily one of the best|Western Conference foothall —sames the bout to stand off and poke his|Gratwick was hurt again but not|its deception, variety and the | it G o ter] i () pruomf DR B el G (G L left Into Al's face. It was ~n anxious gerjously, | fully thought-out principles that vear: Dill intercepted a forward ‘(‘m"flnl'}f‘r; fi'f;]l" l“;”' _‘f’h 'l_vrl(;-{"n::’ crowd that awaited the dcuis [ et rva e regu- | beneath it all. The Crimson fo pass, and after shaking off several [Scramble for first honors has become Dyiiethes Harvarda i uselthorestal | more complicated than ever with | on. The| E Meriden fans emitte” a somewhat || e op B tont o anl o pass, is the best in the east, if Manchester he ran nearly la lars or the substitutes against Brown | T hairited Gt an I weak wail, when ‘" e favorite Was not | ,axt Saturday is something to be de- |SWeeping statement may be allowed, | the entire distance of the field for | three te 2T Summary awarded the verdict. The non-par-|terminde later., Also, there will be a|8nd it was not only excellent in man-|a touchdown. Resides being one of |schedules so a anged that there i Portland. New Bricaintl e tisan atteriant, while he was dis- | quegtion whether ‘Tierney will be|Ual execution but, even more rare,|the backfield stars of the Nutmegs, |strong possibility that they will re-|aypyogc0 “capt, ,...... E. Anderson | « gusted © with the decision | geartad at center when he gets back |1ad been made an integral part of | Dill Is among the most popular. No |main that way the rest of the season, Battin had In mind the recent “robbery”|jnt; the going. Ladd, who replaced |Harvard’s offensive campaign. Be-| matter how hard he is thrown, he |leaving the race in a triple tle Left which deprived Shubert of a wWell |qyarney at tackle, was very active and | 1ind the kind of football that H out of the ‘heap with[ Ohlo Stite;Towa and Wisconsin are| gyeqnrp ., .. Swanson, Capt. earned decision over “Kid" Kaplan. |(pare is more than a passing chance | V&rd played there were many hours | ¢ face. He is one of the [at the top with three victories each Rizht Mopwerd | Champion Introduced. that he may become a regular before |14 days and weeks of painstaking| most consistent ground gainers on [Iowa and Ohio State face easy teams| yfitohell, Gallagher ... Ii. Anderson Johnny Wilson, of Boston, Mass.|\;o vyl game. Gehrke will possibly | tHOUSNt &nd preparation. It failed | the team. | the rest of the season. Wisconsin el [ middleweight champion of the world, |, € A% BERG: THOH e pEiy i |because there was no Mahan or Big Day for Barnikow. the hardest schedule of the three but | noger S ] Tonleky was tntroduced from the ring. |He win b ’““”mml e ..pm-l'xi 1sey to supply the vital punch and Captain Barnikow ‘h#d a big day, [will be the favorite in each of its Right Guard, el Bout at Hartfrod. | head harness similar to that worn by | Decause the right side of the line | registering five touchdowns and he |remaining contests. Olson, Mitchell el It was announced that a Hartford |, ui0 ARG B O M only | Was weaker than the systemn. | booted the ball well both at tries| e | Left Guard. club s planning to put on “Bud | pilirl B RS B ain out | To praise Harvard, of course, is to | aft touchdowns, and punting. | TAKES X-RAY PICTURE. E g Weafer of Stamford and Phil Bloom | (FHEH BIEET JEOE 8 HE N day, |laud Princeton even more, for the | George Talbot plied up a touchdown| An X-Ray picture Has been taken | derson, e G el of New York, in a bout next week. S g g & &Y+ | igers won the game, which is really | on a pretty line play. Talbott con-|of Fire Capt. George Hoffman's knee. | Mitchell, _— i ” " 5 the important thing. And they were | tinues to demonstrate game after |ireman Haffman was injured while | fouls, Sw Pm)tball Pla) er I)les of the better team-—stronger in man | game that he is one of the headiest fighting the blaze in the Herald | Mitchell, KANE VS' BOSS Injuric Sustained in1920 {n\f\\':l‘ \“:’l’\“’l’!‘(]v’lil.\I\i""lyfiu‘[:('::!‘\l:;”ul‘\. ~l::ml ‘.r‘ ',!,:‘:yzl,;,i..h:::kj‘,i.n,,,‘rl,‘:; .srt':'”:;nr:sir(l‘e:fllrv;;‘tv}ymrnn: last Wednesday lvnnr'n‘in\l:. land 15, : e or I D rical EN Y« Ny, 7 ke i e | DY, & 1 ame al, quicker | ing > mos - G when he fell through a weakened | minute f s ; b e : R e e o alcst ReaRter aipbot e ,-‘mw»l' and Carpenter, the speedy part of the flooring. It was feared | 08 el o8 | rne B b e el el SR s s G b mi“hh when thesblafmone | Bristol bovs, both played well. Scott|at first that he had sustained seriou PURITY CONFERENCE, [Bolf, not chess. This is the Fishor ] e : s . L VErsl) hetter opportunists. This deser entered the game in the second half, | and the ambulan as called.| Chicago. Nov. 7.—An intcrnations : i s S mand Over Several Other (n])(:mh;\jv\:nllw r\, 1920, Oliver Winford of ]'rnu'vlr-ln‘ as it was on Saturcay.|and his speed proved too mueh (’nr‘{'\‘:,‘:\r‘: :I:]: :‘-hr arrived he had re- p\lx‘::t ‘« J:im\ m]\,]‘,,’.' “,”;m‘.’, ]‘,‘. of London, making an energetis Who Wear Gridiron Togs. 1‘)“,',',‘,',',”*','“\‘ : ‘l]"";‘" _‘mm“l”*'}]‘f 2 ""\. True, the Tiger is not so food this|the Manchester tackles, At one|covered sufficiently to allow him to| Dec e R anE o el Tt vine e R A BRI s O|year as last, but he is still strong|time while making a eping end |continue his work. To avoid against|be held under direction of the % 3 s Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 7.—Richard | 1ave followed that geme, which was|anough to beat Harvard, system or no | run, Scott directed his interference, |future difficulty, Chief W. J. Noble |World's Purity Ifedo n with [5C0TeS have made him the talk o between teams of Alfred and Alle- A pointing out players he wanted tack- |ordered the X-Ray picture taken. headquarters at LaCross " | B Keith Kane, leader of the Harv gheny University, the later an Epis- | = arter all football eleven, is a Captain of Cap- & Rl e ey | copal clerical preparatory institution [ roothall n—the Lour the | ed about 25 yards. The Nutmegs lmrl ey e '-'*u_‘f NG A the Wittme and, Harvard | proved the same stonewall as | \,VHEI\I A FF! I OW I\ ZFD . he Wittm ar ur 1 ame stonewall a m1 AR NEEDS A I ains. t: at Meadyille, Pa Kec Il add, the Gilroys, who sce their it ganmes. Rogers, the center, time ‘\ it is men that make a|led. As a result, the runner cover- RY BRIGGS He is the hig boss in a football way What Jerbdint o 5 P over Fiske Brown, guard. Captain of R LEE T D L R minor bruise in the region of the|opportunities and comne throogh with 1 again broke through and caught | h, doing & ter thiugs| the \visitors backfield men before the track team; George Owen, one of | 0 AL the regular backs, Captain of the |ChEst cavity put Ferry out of the|the vital pu h ever taught them. In| they had got started. Jimmy Con- | rame, but he fe 10 i1l effects | S hockey team, and Arthur Conlon, sub- | §2me, but he felt no ill effects until|than any co stitute quarterback, captain of the |SVeral lays had elapsed. He then|one flash of alertness end spewd | nelly and Buchney seemed to enjoy | 3 baseball t¢ | became ind rapldly there develop- | ull the duli, , precise perfection | the whole affair immensely, and they | | Louis Mc( . captain of the . ed what specialists defined as a form | of the Harvard system had hecn nul- | put up a fine exhibition despite the — i8:/the only fer of a major sports O tuberculosis. The young man con- | lific weak opposition. Chartier and Pet- A% W weaking | gridiron | inued to grow weak despite every ef- Seodo . 8o | erson, the Army and Navy ends, were | tame. He was a member of the varsi- | 0"t of the | the olyy players with the visitors who e har e = PLAY SGORELESS T]E gave evidence of being football play I . ¢ — ) The summar { X Trojan Club and Fast Locks Eleven | Nutmegs, All-Manchester. PRINCETON NOW New York Commission Suspends De| Taken Into Camp Last Month Bat- | Connelly Chartier | I R D e tle Yesterday on \ Terms \' | 1S Fo 2 POINTING FOR YALE| Foe, dacks ana Rown for atesed | =y, \G ™ O 0L e [ON6ll v ol MeLaughin | BRINGIN | Intraction of Com. Rules. hardest battle of the season for the N S o With Crimson Out of Way, Coach| local club, the Trojans of this city | poius r‘\hn;i\';\i(::‘ Roper Has Squad at Work for | e oo Y Jpreddie | held the Windsof L b to a&| ht Guard. Jacks, Billy DeFFoe and “Spider” [scorcless tie yesterday afternoon on | pogers A1 o 5 Roach, the three boxers recently sus- | the Locks h 5 ds el G ... Muske, Waddell Saturday's Game. ) 1 s 1e Locks home grounds, Cetitay 2 pended by the State Athletic Com- It the second time that the | proce. N, g D86, INGIBON o e e ) 3 Princeton, N Nov Prince- | mission, have also been suspended by S 1 met this season ‘xm M Dwyer ton today is fr . whole lot bet- | the New York I13oxing.commission, me was a_repetition of | Luchmey N T Tohnsor ter than it di Oct. 22, after de Las bee m known by Aley. Wi |the battie that marked the fivat meets TR SEEAD SR AT &_rm_l\:”} feats by Navy and Chicago, and bet- | Castle, secret to 2 athletic | ing of the teams which resulted in a | Left Tacl J ter also t t did about 4:30 | hoar 14 to 0 win for the Trojans. By losing | Koplowit 4 2 e P o'clock uternoon, at| pensions of the boxers in |ty the locais, about a month ago, the Tt Bad g which time George Owe kicked a | N¢ Y te for the same || cks team suffered its first reverse | alhof AR s R tleld goal 1 et Harverdeinto | dUrAton: au: tiiose | pinnad QRGO (LAEN |0t e aakon Tifalm ari et ent g Bt y Massey, Wright el R ey Tht i L 1 g | Quarterback. $hvee-pol v o Jac irrangements for yestero ime at | B Barnikow I RRIKROD Just as « l the A 1 time he|once in the hopes that the tables | Right Haltback g lk‘;:\'”‘n £ et ¢ ' 1| tore the Athletic nt\, Srillen furnpaSthe IOnh L) I TR KO . Benson dea ha ear ti tha ul v trenghthened by some of the fastest | Dil, Scott :;:\"213 ‘w[ them and n‘w Cri "‘ st S 1 Roach were | yoressional players in the state while Left Halfback. enter the t Baturdayl Tt tary | S Ta g ; Kenney, Carpenter DPallseiper cEanEsand ) d Nags sl o et ] ; eup: En Corbett and Cuba Score, Nutmegs 58, All-Manches- waved tri over the e o {|nect i 1 foney and Sobelek; rds, | ter 0; touchdown, E. Barnikow 5; Yale for tu ‘ : : D n and Olestrum; center, Gun-| Dill, I Talbott: goals | : e A A : : Ao ianidl auarterback, Gorman 1alf- | from toug 8: ref- | 1 I . ks, Burns and Gray; fullback, | eree, 11 Fordham; | e Loie nswered every g ) become | In the Loct were' the follow- | man, M. Howitz Syracuse Univers- Harvard 1ileng rday for s Ends, 1 ind Felley; tackles, | it¥: nesmen, Dr. J. M. Klein, Ver lj"vm‘ € ¢ ‘ 1 Rosin: gnards, Delaney and | mont, and Willlam Madden, of Man- :‘\‘“‘;m,’, i t » ,' ey + Shea; quarterback, | chester; time of periods, 15 minutes who : g n cks, IFord and Holmes 1 t I r Garrity might not 2 haif. Tt sl ol MUCTT PRUIT SHIPPED more tha t L 1.0s Angoles, Nov. 7.—Two hundred : PRPRING FOR OPENER - i Keene Fitz eter 1 3 PRUPARING n UrbnLE ok ! LSO Santody er, In keey tw e dai rn markets, L the Navy a 1 ; LIS e cording to 1 by rafiroad 4 “ after all, I : title prohably w Hardware City Five to Pratice Several offict; re. Los turnishes sz beat Yale M S ) i f meet Jimm Fimes 2 Week thirt s dally, | 3» all ‘the other opy e e i I's A t chamg The Hardware City five will meet W :y(-’x:h:u:\ i 3 it Eh ANt ARl B P T AN e ead CARD TOURNAMENT ‘ {5 by it Faie iski will work The winter “45" tournaments at LEONARD AND FRIEDMAN VLN L ler the coaching of € : M. T. A an society rooms | g Dave D eam is coming will he started next Thuesday evening Chr,:::m,"’,; sl A Lignt Thurs,, Fri. and Sat. t t clip and will be in Thelist of entrants is growing rapidly | amp B eonard of N | ahape Tor.t ame with the | and Indications are that this year's here on Tuesday | tonrnaments will beequally as pn]’\ll—J will be a preitm- | lar as those of lats year. The wmkyy" round bout at tic \ere . ry and the big game will Le fol- |tournaments will cantinue until next agsit adie i o o | Nov. 22. — FOOTIWATIC | Sl fads TYork has heen od to mect 9 1v‘ r| P ) | ,}‘..,,‘, 1 N Friedman of Chicag drielsht | -- I L b == |night No — FORICSES P CHRiAEe

Other pages from this issue: